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100 results
Telephone conversation # 12822, transcript, MARVIN WATSON and RICHARD DALEY, 3/18/1968, 5:15PM
(Item)
- been reading about this coznmission from Kennedy. about it. We've started reading DALEY: Oh, yes. WATSON: I want to tell you what we know about it. Mel Elfrin, of Newsweek magazine, tells us he got his original tip from a freind of Ted
- 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 9 Then, of course, when he got back to New York, he got back on a Sunday. Newsweek was in the habit then of promoting, on the Sunday news, its lead Monday story. I
- Saltonstall - Time Magazine Chuck Roberts - Newsweek Frank Reynolds - ABC Dan Rather - CBS Ray Scherer - NBC Jack Horner - Washington Star Sid Davis - Westinghouse Broadcasting Jack Sutherland - U.S. News and World Report Forrest Boyd - Mutual Broadcasting
- \'\ ., /J'; ·~ Mr. Wilson is doing a piece for Look Magazine on Vice President Humphrey. He is requesting the President's assessment, not for attribution, of Mr. Humphrey. The President described the Vice President as "the man of all the people I
- as a general assignment reporter for about six months till the end of 1963, then went to Newsweek in early 1964, spent three years there as an associate editor largely in charge of the radio and television departments, otherwise just "swing writing
- - l August 5, 1967 NOTES OF MEETING OF PRESIDENT WITH MEL ELFIN, NEWSWEEK: JOHN STEELE OF TIME: JACK SUTHERLAND OF U.S. NEWS, JULY 28, 1967 The President had a general discussion with these three magazine writers on the Detroit riot and civil
- , Bob Manning, who moved from the State Department to the White House as the coordinator of all Vietnam press policy. Bob then left shortly thereafter, about a month thereafter, for the editorship of the Atlantic magazine. That left me without a clear
- saying that Greenfield didn't have that authority? Z: Bob Manning left the government about the end of August or early September to become editor of the Atlantic Magazine. never got that letter Bob Manning did. Jim Greenfield One of the headaches we
- Survey (HES); the censorship issue; lifting Ev Martin's (Newsweek) credentials; Oriana Falacci; overall performance of the press in Vietnam; the Caravelle Bar issue; individual journalists characterized; TV journalism; Morley Safer; LBJ and the press
- .) Secretary McNamara: Time Magazine said the reservists who were called up had good morale. Newsweek said many of them were grumbling. George Ball: I have seen a cynical assertion that the reserves were called under the pretext of Korea but for actual use
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- in there. I was going to say, as an old news- paperman you were tending to favor the magazine people here. J: Perhaps. That's because it is a tough story and it is complicated and a magazine writer has a little more time to work up his piece, to gather his
- sixties when they brought Lansdale back out there as special team to win the war, and I had read a piece in done . I happened in the head of this to hear about this early on, Foreign Affairs magazine that Lansdale There was something, it seemed
- very much if Johnson or anyone It/as monitori ng the New Yorker for him. Kennedy read it himsel f. The Ne\'1 Yorker, fond as I am of it, is not taken very seriously as a political magazine, and I don't think he'd much care. No, I never had that. I
- Johnson standing up waving his arms over you? S: , , That picture got a lot of publicity around the country, Newsweek and a number of other magazines, because it was so typical of meetings we would have in the White House. B: What were
- , what-- Did these reflect the editorial opinions of their various newspapers or magazines? M: If so, it was coincidental. G: Really? r~: Yes. If so~ it was coincidental. I can think of one or two cases where it had happened, but I think
- . ··'\ ' ~· 'I ~· \: you can help any to .keep from getting this bad implication, .news magazines. .·(;. .i; ;,. :·· ; .• ·. .: then we are better .:·-~ ···~:· ·. * * I · : 'i·. ·.: .• .· ·i ... I# .. ~;f .-r;.. : • • t
Folder, "October 14, 1968 - Foreign Policy Advisory Group meeting," Meeting Notes Files, Box 3
(Item)
- bombing and disclose the full record. LIFE magazine had referred to the President and the _Secretary of State as the "two lonely men. " They would still be here. The President then turned to Secretary Clifford and asked him to brief the group, first
- shot. 11 # # # MEETING OF THE PRESIDENT WITH MR. ST. CLAIR MCKELWAY OF THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE ON FEBRUARY 15, 1968. Mr. McKelway: I have been on the New Yorker since 1933. These days I am a free writer on the staff. A lot of our people have been
- material in the last few days meetings with .many newspaper people, l;>ureau chiefs, columnists, magazine writers and broadcast men. He said he gave backgrounders to them all. He said they all practically surrender. Kilpatrick (Washington Post) has a son
- be remarkably better overnight. ~ s-) The President asked if there was anything serious to the India-China border fight. Rusk and McNamara agreed that there was not. The President suggested that a speech or magazine or newspaper article be ·written
- ~· MEETING OF THE PRESIDENT WITH HUGH SIDEY OF TIME MAGAZINE FEBRUARY 8, 1967 This was a general discussion on American involvement in Vietnam. The President said that President Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson had done everything possible
- for the Charlotte Observer and in the Washington bureau of the Knight newspapers, K-N-I-G-H-T newspapers . In 1961 I left the Observer and was a magazine writer years with the Saturday Evening Post . for four In 1965, at the time of the start of my Vietnam
- LBJ and the Vietnam War; Lady Bird's interview with a magazine; Lady Bird reads about Beautification; Lady Bird has lunch meeting with Bess Abell about mail; Lady Bird meets with Stewart Udall about Beautification; Lady Bird swims and has
- , that is directly. I started working for Time magazine in Paris in 1950 and at that time the French war in Indochina was going on. So I had a good deal to do from the Paris end of covering the story, that is, from the French end of the story. And [I] became
- Magazine asked why Ho Chi Minh would not come to the conference table. The President said that Ho has looked upon South Vietnam for years as something he wants to rule. The President felt that each day Ho Chi Minh has a little more doubt that he will ever
- White House correspondents, wrote about the administration Then know, and wrote a column on the presidency . I got started on Tet! , the book . in a strange way . I had been writing and free-lancing And it started, a magazine writer, done before
- Cleaning at the old Sam Johnson house and storage at the hangar; Lady Bird looks through her courtship letters from LBJ and photographs of Lady Bird as a teenager; Vietnamese visitors to the LBJ Ranch; Life magazine gift of park in Johnson City
- worked on for almost six or eight months leading up to the announcement and then later there was a magazine article on it in the New York Times and then later in my book, To Be Equal, which went into it more in detail. Mr. Johnson is mentioned in the book
- millions of dollars to the Post Office Department for the below cost operations. It includes your villages, it includes your rural routes, and it includes delivery of your publications. They're subsidized, you see. These big magazines that yell
- LBJ talks about Vietnam; Lady Bird devotes day to Beautification with meeting in the morning; story published in Life magazine; Lady Bird lunches with niece, Diana, and discusses Girls Scouts; Lady Bird, Mary Lasker and Walter Washington tour
Oral history transcript, Maxwell D. Taylor, interview 1a (I), 1/9/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- , which unhappily is not an uncommon thing in the history of Vietnam but to us in America it looked like a horrible thing. I can still remember the picture of the burning bonze on the front page of one of our weekly magazines. It shocked our entire
- the standpoint of export trade and from a standpoint of reducing defense costs. F: You always saw it more of an investment than you did in any sort of an aid sense, didn't you? H: I made a statement at one time, which appeared on a front cover of TIME Magazine